Tadano’s big all terrain goes to Colombia

Tadano has sold the first of it’s range-topping 400t ATF400G-6 all terrain cranes in South America, to Transportes Montejo in Colombia.

TAdano said, “Our dealer for Colombia, Gruas Japonesas, and Tadano have built a very good relationship with Transportes Montejo by providing high quality products and services. Before we delivered the ATF400G-6, Transportes Montejo had already bought two boom trucks and two rough terrain cranes.”

Tadano says the Colombian rental house had seen the ATF400G-6 at Bauma 2013 and been impressed by the crane’s main boom capacity and compact carrier. The new crane will be used for energy related installation and maintenance projects, as well as for bridge building. As well as working in Colombia, it will be available to Transportes Montejo’s branches in Panama and Venezuela.

Cranes to Morrow

Liebherr dealer and tower hire firm Morrow says it plans a major fleet expansion in 2014, with 56 cranes, worth around $70m, to be purchased or ordered this year, to meet growing demand in North America and Australasia.

At this year’s ConExpo Morrow made a major purchase, ordering close to half of its planned new cranes from Liebherr Group.

Horizontal jib EC-H models and luffing boom HC-L models were included in this order.

The rental firm said that beginning in late 2013 it had purchased a substantial number of Liebherr luffing boom cranes. These cranes were bought in order to fulfill the needs of its customers in high-density urban centres. Some of these cranes would be used for the first time in the Australian market.

Manitowoc show Algerian ambition

Manitowoc has said it intends to use two Algerian trade shows, Batimatec and Algiers International Fair, to demonstrate its determination to expand and develop in country. The firm is showcasing a Potain self-erecting crane and Grove rough-terrain crane at the events with two of its local dealers, Sarl VIBA and Eurl MGP.

The manufacturer said that as well as its direct sales and support services, it would work closely with its dealers in Algeria who supply its full range of Potain tower cranes, Grove mobile cranes and Manitowoc crawler cranes. The dealers will also provide complete after-market services including technical assistance, assembly, handling and training.

Carlos Pimenta, Manitowoc area manager for Algeria, said: “Demand for our cranes in Algeria has steadily increased over the past few years and the country’s growing economy makes us very ambitious for this exciting market. We have operated in Algeria for many years and have built a strong dealer network and widespread support service. Now is our time to build on this foundation, and these two trade shows are an ideal way for us to showcase our capabilities and highlight our desire to grow.”

Sennebogen Academy inaugurated

The Sennebogen Academy and the Erich Sennebogen Museum have been officially opened in Straubing, Germany. The newly founded Sennebogen Academy has a modern machine training center, demonstration site, as well as training rooms and conference facilities.

The Erich Sennebogen Museum exhibits with the historic machines and documents on display from the firm’s more than 60-year history.

Erich Sennebogen the company’s chief executive said: “With the opening of our Sennebogen Academy we are investing in the future. Instruction and training are the supporting pillars of every enterprise. We are building on well-trained employees and dealers and we are also offering our customers the perfect environment to even better ‘experience’ our machines. At the same time the Erich Sennebogen Museum ventures to look back to the roots of the family-run enterprise, Sennebogen.”

Zoomlion Jost Flat-top tower crane launched

The first Zoomlion Jost flat top tower crane has been launched: the T8030-25U. A project team based at the Chinese manufacturers research centre in Germany developed the crane.

The flat top tower crane T8030-25U has a maximum lifting moment of 4925kN/m. The firm said that the design philosophy was to optimise the design of major structures, including crane top, crane boom, crane boom pull rods, climbing frame, upper and under bearing, cab, and improving the safety of components, including platform, handrail, connecting screw rod and safety rope in crane boom.

Zoomlion said that it hopes the tower crane improves the sale in the overseas high-end areas including European countries, Singapore and Hong Kong through the application of German technology.

Kobelco see home growth

Japanese manufacturer Kobelco has recorded high levels of growth in its domestic market, whilst international markets saw a drop in demand. The firm announced that aggregate demand in the domestic crawler crane market in the fiscal year 2013 was up by 47% from the previous year. The company said that the improvement was due to an increase in the number of public work projects significantly because of the availability of deferred funds from the large-scale supplementary budget of fiscal 2012 and other factors, in addition to reconstruction demand.

In the manufacturer’s overseas markets aggregate demand was down 6% compared to last year according, to an estimate by Kobelco Cranes. The Japanese firm saw increases in North America mainly in shale gas-related investments, as well as in Southeast Asia with active infrastructure investment centered in Singapore and Malaysia, and in Hong Kong. However, these results were tempered by sluggish growth in Europe, the Middle East, China, and India.

The company said that the weakness of the Japanese Yen in comparison to other currencies as well had affected the firms business. Although a higher ratio of sales overseas had been recorded.
Describing its domestic production Kobelco said it achieved higher profits by increasing production to accommodate a large number of inquiries and orders. The company has been finding new overseas suppliers and preparing an assessment procedure for new parts. The manufacturer believes that it has developed a solid foundation for global procurement that will capable of dealing with risks caused by exchange rate fluctuations.

The company had factories in India and China where production and unit sales were slow Kobelco said this was because demand in both countries remained stagnant. The company anticipates demand to pick up momentum in 2014 after receiving a large order at the end of last year. In China, Kobelco have put effort into strengthening local distributors and made preparations for product lineup expansion.
The firm’s consolidated net sales in 2013 increased 24.5% year on year to JPY56,639, consolidated ordinary income increased JPY5,450m to JPY3,200m, and consolidated net income increased JPY6,376m to JPY3,531m.

Looking forward to next year the Japanese company said that demand for crawler cranes in the domestic market was expected to grow more than last year and remain strong since the operating conditions for construction machinery remain high due to active public investments and other positive economic factors such as the Tokyo Olympics.

In overseas markets, demand in North America and Southeast Asia is expected to remain steady, and demand in India, China, and Europe has been gradually recovering from stagnation.

In production terms Kobelco was looking to continue implementing its Cross Magma Project, switching from make-to-stock production to assemble-to-order production. The company was looking to establish a production system with higher efficiency to provide a better response to higher demand.

The manufacturers subsidiaries in China and India would continue reducing costs through local procurement. At the same time, these units would strengthen their sales and service networks, improve their product lineup, and aim at building a structure capable of meeting recovering demand.

Net sales in 2014 are forecast to reach approximately JPY73,000m and ordinary income is anticipated to be JPY3,500m.